In my case I want to clean debris from pulp by pumping it through centricleaners (long cylinderical cones). The pulp enters tangentially which forces the debris & dirt to the sides & out the bottom while the lighter material gets accepted out the top.
Anyway, I will purchase a pump with a 3000 lpm capacity which will draw the water it needs from the new tank. The pulp stock enters the pump suction between the supply tank and the pump so no agitation is required. This is standard practise in the industry.
The tank in question will remain a constant level because the makeup water flow will be controlled from the DCS.
My concern, is how big doea the tank have to be for level control to be effective. I've heard of numbers like 1 minute retention time for good process control but I can't any reference material to confirm that number.
Obviously, I would like the tank to have as small a footprint as possible. The floor is designed to accept 400#/ft which equates to 6 ft of liquid. Therefore I would design for a normal operating level of 4-5 feet.
To conclude, the pump will draw about 792 usgpm (3,000 lpm) from a tank which has adequate make up water supply. There will be a DP cell installed to control the level via the DCS. The question becomes how much retention time do I need? That will determine the footprint.
That's how I intended to proceed.
Your assistance is appreciated.